Lifestyle
Someone Thought It Was OK to Put a 60-Ton Pool on a Brooklyn Roof. NYC Says ‘NOPE’
The warmth could make anybody a bit loopy, particularly the warmth New York Metropolis had been coping with for plenty of days. However possibly do not take drastic — even harmful — measures simply to remain cool.
The New York Metropolis Division of Buildings tweeted a photograph of an unlawful pool that was discovered on the rooftop of a Williamsburg constructing. The division mentioned that the 480-square-foot pool, which was not constructed as much as code, had the capability to carry 60 tons of water.
The constructing on Flushing Avenue the place the pool was discovered just isn’t outfitted to assist that sort of weight, the DOB mentioned, therefore why it was ordered to be torn down.
The division mentioned the pool was put in with out correct permits or skilled development.
Footage from Wednesday afternoon confirmed the pool nonetheless up, however all of the water had been drained.
Lifestyle
Opinion: Remembering the star screenwriter Robert Towne
I’ve heard dozens of jokes about screenwriters that I can’t repeat here. The punchlines suggest that in the hierarchy of Hollywood, screenwriters come last, after producers, directors, stars, and probably the caterer.
But Robert Towne, who died this week at the age of 89, was something rare: a star screenwriter.
“There are no novels or plays I’m itching to write and there never have been,” he wrote for Esquire magazine in 1991.
And Towne’s movie characters said things that stick with you.
In the 1974 film Chinatown, for which he won the Academy Award, an informant calls LA gumshoe Jake Gittes, played by Jack Nicholson, and asks, “Are you alone?” The private eye replies, “Isn’t everyone?”
When someone calls Jake Gittes an innocent man, Towne has him say, “Well, I’ve been accused of a lot of things before … but never that.”
In 1973’s The Last Detail, a career sailor on hard duty, also played by Jack Nicholson, is asked if he’s ever been married. He says, and not wistfully, “Yeah … once … She wanted me to go to trade school and become a TV repair man. Driving all around in all that smog, fixing TVs out of the back of a VW bus. I just couldn’t do it.”
It’s a speech that captures “the last detail” of feared tedium.
Pauline Kael, the New Yorker critic, once wrote that Towne had an “ear for unaffected dialogue,” and “a gift for never forcing a point.”
He reportedly touched up the scene in Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather where Don Corleone and his son, Michael, whom he never wanted to join his crime family, discuss mob hits and treacheries. Then Don looks up to ask, “How’s your boy?” “He’s good,” Michael tells him. “He’s smarter than I am. Three years old and he can read the funny papers.”
The conversation’s shift from murderous to tender feels entirely sincere.
Towne was a professional. He won Oscars, BAFTA awards, and Golden Globes, but many of his scripts never became films. Or, didn’t turn out as he’d hoped. He wrote the screenplay for a Tarzan film, but didn’t like the eventual production, and so put the name of his dog, P.H. Vazak, in the credits. The worldwide Oscars audience later heard the name of Towne’s dog read out as a nominee for 1984’s best adapted screenplay.
As with so much else Towne wrote, that scene couldn’t have been scripted better.
Lifestyle
Diddy Boards Private Jet In First Post Since Scrubbing His Instagram
Sean Diddy Combs was back on the radar Friday night … but this time he was seen boarding his jet to fly out of town as his federal sex trafficking case continues to loom over him.
The rap mogul posted a new video on his Instagram Story — showing him walking toward his private plane at an airport with a mat on the ground that read, “Combs Air.”
Diddy briefly stopped and turned to the pilot standing on the tarmac, while stating, “What up? How you doing?” He then gave the pilot a fist bump before climbing a flight of stairs into the aircraft and mumbling, “No place like home.”
It’s the first time Diddy has posted to his IG page since wiping it clean in late June following his apology to his ex-girlfriend, Cassie, for beating the hell out of her on video that was broadcasted around the world amid his criminal probe.
5/19/24
As you know … Diddy has been under federal investigation for alleged sex and narcotics trafficking, as well as firearms-related offenses. Prosecutors have convened a federal grand jury to try to bring an indictment against Diddy.
The grand jury will weigh testimony from witnesses and other evidence before voting whether to indict Diddy, although it’s unclear what, if any, charges will be handed down.
Diddy has also faced a flood of lawsuits, including one from Cassie that was quickly settled, mainly accusing him of sexual offenses. Diddy has denied all wrongdoing.
Meanwhile, the last time we saw Diddy was in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, where he went white water rafting last week.
Lifestyle
Cats on leashes … yes, it's a thing
On a sunny afternoon in San Francisco, Jennifer Privett took a stroll with her very large, very fluffy, blue-eyed Himalayan, Jean Claude.
With his luxurious, cream-colored coat and chocolate face, tail and paws, Jean Claude would turn heads even if he wasn’t sauntering along the streets of San Francisco on a leash.
As it is, he attracts a lot of attention from passersby when Privett walks with him several times a week through the neighborhood.
“People all the time are stopping to talk to us,” Privett said, just as a stranger walked up to ask the cat’s name. “He’s very sociable, and I’ve also made new friends because of this guy.”
Privett said the cat accompanies her to nearby destinations such as the dry cleaner, a pizzeria and several coffee shops.
“If I ever go there without him on the weekends, they ask, ‘Where’s Jean Claude today?’”
The cat dilemma
Whether or not cats should be allowed outside the home is controversial in this country — though they roam freely in many others, such as the United Kingdom, Morocco and Japan.
Cats can get hurt outside. But it is also estimated that cats kill over 1 billion birds each year in the U.S.
“There’s no good answer to the cat dilemma,” said Jessica Pierce, a bioethicist who’s written a book about the ethics of keeping pets. “It really seems problematic to let cats outside because of the implications for wildlife and also because of the danger cats are in from cars and malicious people and so forth. At the same time, it also seems bad to keep cats indoors all the time, because they’re wild at heart and they have a lot of cat behaviors that just don’t get satisfied, or are difficult to satisfy, inside.”
Taking cats out for walks while still restraining them has become a way for some owners to try to navigate this.
“I think for the right cat, it can certainly create environmental enrichment, get them some more exercise and things like that,” said cat veterinarian Grace Carter.
But Carter said cat-walking is not for everyone.
“Some cats are too stressed for it,” she said. “Some never adapt to the harness and leash.”
Reasons to walk a cat
For Privett, walking Jean Claude was a practical decision. She said they started taking neighborhood walks about 10 years ago, when the cat was 3.
“It kind of just happened naturally,” she said. “I mostly have lived in apartments, and he wanted to go outside. But I didn’t feel comfortable just letting him out anytime.”
For fellow San Francisco cat owner Jennifer Balenbin, the great outdoors are a way to improve her kitty SpongeBob’s mental health. They even show up together at occasional meetups in San Francisco parks for likeminded people and their sociable felines.
“The vet wanted to put him on Prozac,” Balenbin said. “But she first was like, ‘Can you let him outside, to roam around?’ I was like, ‘No, this is the city. I can’t do that.’ So we tried walking him. And we found that the more he goes out and he’s with us, he’s more calm at home.”
A trend driven by Instagram
Cat-walking isn’t a new phenomenon. Owners have long paraded their prize felines on leashes for competitive cat shows.
But the more recent trend has been fueled by social media.
“People are seeing these gorgeous photos of cats outdoors,” said Laura Moss, the creator of Adventure Cats, an online resource for people who want to take their cats out and about safely. “And they want to try it for themselves.”
Moss said owners who want to leash-train their cats should do it slowly and gently.
“Introduce the harness when they’re indoors — don’t put it on them yet, let them just sniff it and get used to it. Make it a positive experience, so put some treats on it,” she said. “Once they’re used to that, clip the harness on, tighten it, add the leash, and just practice walking around at home. And then, once your cat is comfortable like that, you can take them outdoors.”
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